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VIDEO A day of a Korean psychiatrist living in a country that won't admit it needs one

South Korea has held the highest suicide rate in the OECD for years — more than double the global average. It also has one of the lowest doctor-to-patient ratios in the developed world. The math is grim, and well-documented. What it doesn't explain is why so many Koreans who need help still won't walk through a psychiatrist's door. The reason often comes down to two letters and a number. In Korea's national health insurance system, every psychiatric visit is logged under an "F code" — the classification used for mental and behavioral disorders. F32 for depression. F41 for anxiety. F90 for ADHD. The codes are protected by medical confidentiality law and cannot be shared without the patient's consent. And yet the fear of the F code is one of the most persistent reasons Koreans avoid psychiatric care. Patients worry the code will resurface — in a future insurance application, a background check, some unspecified moment where a single record might cost them something. It is a fear shaped less by what the law permits than by what Korean society still quietly believes: that depression i

By Yu Seung-eun
[VIDEO] A day of a Korean psychiatrist  living in a country that won't admit it needs one
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CEO & Publisher: Oh Young-jinDigital News Email: webmaster@koreatimes.co.krTel: 02-724-2114Online newspaper registration No: 서울,아52844Date of registration: 2020.02.05Masthead: The Korea TimesCopyright © koreatimes.co.kr. All rights reserved.

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VIDEO K-BEAUTY worldwide: SOAK brings Korean beauty products to U.S. market

Video by Lee Min-young, Kim Kang-minOnce you visit the Soak Lifestyle website, you will notice how many great Korean skin products that you have never heard of are out there for picky Korean consumers to use.Soak is a skin curating company that started off as an online beauty magazine that deals with Korean skin products. Soak's CEO Judy Kim uses her online blog to promote Korean skincare brands and bring high quality products to the U.S. cosmetics and skincare market."Americans know that Korean products are good but they just don't know what to choose. I thought there weren't enough information out there for average Americans who love to take care of their skin and are interested in Korean products." Judy said during a collaboration project with Korean cosmetics brand Pony Effect.While working directly with Seoul-based marketers, brand managers, and executives in the Korean beauty industry and help promoting their new launches, Judy has many connections with the entertainment world and works with a lot of foreigner influencers so that Korean brands could reach out to potential

Oct 1, 2019By Lee Min-young
K-BEAUTY worldwide: SOAK brings Korean beauty products to U.S. market [VIDEO]
  • Korea's trade surplus in beauty products hits new high in 2018
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Food tour around Central Asia Street: Uzbek cuisine & Russian dessert (Part 1)

Video by Lee Min-young, Kim Kang-minIf you look closely into the little alleyways and streets near the Dongdaemun Stadium, Korea's largest shopping district, you can find an exotic neighborhood where signs in Cyrillic line the streets. Known as “Little Russia,” this community is mainly home to migrants from Central Asian nations, particularly Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, and Mongolia. The neighborhood was full of Central Asian and Russian restaurants so we had to try out their food first! We visited 'Samarikant,' the very first restaurant to serve Uzbek food in Seoul, and 'Russian Cakes' to indulge our sweet tooth.

Sep 25, 2019By Lee Min-young
Food tour around Central Asia Street: Uzbek cuisine & Russian dessert (Part 1)
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The first man to walk along the length of Yangtze River

By Lee Min-youngWhen it comes to tests of endurance, there are mental and physical limits to human ability. But humans are capable of far more than we think. And extreme athlete and professional adventurer Ash Dykes is living proof.Dykes is a British explorer from North Wales and the first recorded person to complete a 4,000-mile (6,400-km) trek along the entire length of the Yangtze River in China, which took him a year to complete.The Yangtze is the third-longest river in the world and the longest to flow through a single country."I just returned from the expedition about three weeks ago," he said. "I feel very skinny and I've lost a lot of weight but I'm feeling great mentally and physically."FULL ARTICLE AT: https://bit.ly/2m6PV9q

Sep 23, 2019By Lee Min-young
The first man to walk along the length of Yangtze River
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National-level-athlete becomes Miss Korea beauty queen

Video By Lee Min-young, Kim Kang-minMeet Woo Hee-jun, 25, the 2019 Miss Korea first runner-up. She is extremely talented and has great skills onstage, but she also has a serious history with sports.She is a member of the South Korean national kabaddi team and has continued her medal march since she joined the sport in 2015. Kabaddi is India's traditional contact sport.In 2016, she helped the Korean women's team win the 4th Kabadi Asian Women's Championship in Busan and won silver at the Iran Championship the following year. She also clinched gold at the Taiwan Championships and finished fifth at the Asian Games in 2018.Her next goal is to become a soldier and dedicate her life to protecting the nation. She has been recently accepted as a Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) cadet.Woo said taking part in the Miss Korea pageant was part of her bigger goal and vision ― she wanted to break the common stereotype that athletes are only capable of doing sports. "I don't see any reason why people like me should not be joining beauty pageants. I hope I can inspire athletes like me as well as

Sep 18, 2019By Lee Min-young
National-level-athlete becomes Miss Korea beauty queen
News

Did you know Korea loves street dance, too?

South Korea is well known for K-pop, its beauty products, K-dramas and many more. But did you know that street dancing is also slowly becoming huge in Korea, too?And the street dance culture in Korea is ever expanding not because of popular dancers flaunting fancy dance moves on television but thanks to average Koreans just like you who work nine to six everyday ― people who are no different from you other than the fact that they have a cool hobby they can enjoy after work.

Sep 16, 2019By Lee Min-young
Did you know Korea loves street dance, too?
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Restricted area along DMZ opens for peace marathon

The 16th DMZ International Peace Marathon was held Sunday in Cheorwon, Gangwon Province, with more than 6,000 participants, including 444 foreigners, taking part. The DMZ Marathon course runs along the border area between North and South Korea. With the two Koreas still technically at war, participants got a glimpse into the ongoing military tension on the peninsula; the civilian access control area was opened for 15 kilometers for the event.

Sep 3, 2019By Lee Min-young
Restricted area along DMZ opens for peace marathon
News

Ex-Japanese PM expresses regret over Korea-Japan diplomatic row

By Park Ji-wonVideo by Lee Min-young, Kim Kang-minJapanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe should restore relations with South Korea immediately in order to tackle his priority issues such as the repatriation of Japanese citizens abducted by North Korea and establishing diplomatic relations between Tokyo and Pyongyang, according to former Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama."Japanese PM Shinzo Abe cannot resolve the issue of Japanese abductees by North Korean spies and establish diplomatic relations with North Korea," unless he improves the Seoul-Tokyo relationship, Hatoyama, who served in the post between 2009 and 2010, said during an exclusive interview with The Korea Times.Full article at: https://bit.ly/2jSkYot

Sep 2, 2019By Lee Min-young
Ex-Japanese PM expresses regret over Korea-Japan diplomatic row
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WHY I quit living as a K-pop idol: Ex-girl group member talks about the dark side of K-pop

Interviewed by Dong Sun-hwaVideo by Lee Min-young, Kim Kang-minYou have your mobile phone confiscated. Your parents' visit is timed. An extreme diet is part of your life that comes with a 10 daily weigh-ins. On top of this, you practice dancing and singing for hours on end. Even when you are sick, you have to go on stage and perform in exactly the manner your agent wants. There is no freedom or privacy. This was the life of Kong Yoo-jin, 19, former lead vocalist for K-pop girl band BONUSbaby. At 17, Kong debuted with the album "Urikiri" ― meaning "all by ourselves" in Korean ― in January 2017. But she left the six-piece group in September 2018, to devote herself to "studies." The band has stopped performing since then.

Aug 27, 2019By Lee Min-young
WHY I quit living as a K-pop idol: Ex-girl group member talks about the dark side of K-pop
News

VIDEO South Korea holding military drills around Dokdo Islands

South Korean forces began two days of expanded drills on Sunday (August 25) around Dokdo Islands, prompting a protest from Tokyo only days after Seoul said it would scrap an intelligence-sharing pact with Japan amid worsening relations. (SOUTH KOREAN NAVY HANDOUT)

Aug 27, 2019By Choi Won-suk
South Korea holding military drills around Dokdo Islands [VIDEO]
  • 'Dokdo drills not productive amid Seoul-Tokyo row': US
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Superorganism: 'Internet is crucial to our existence'

What is more modern than a band with members from all around the world whose work together is based online? The genesis of the pop-collective octet Superorganism ― how the band was made ― is as intriguing as its experimental sound effects and glitzy music videos.Superorganism defines itself as a "multimedia art project," according to Harry, guitarist, singer-songwriter and composer of the band. The multinational band consists of members from Japan, New Zealand, Australia, the United States, the United Kingdom and South Korea. They began as a casual recording project among online friends, but developed into a more serious music project.

Aug 26, 2019By Lee Min-young
Superorganism: 'Internet is crucial to our existence'
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